The Mercury News Weekend

Gavin Newsom proves that he’s California’s most liberal governor

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2019, Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

California state government just became even more leftist, as hard as that might be for some to envision. But it’s indisputab­le after Gov. Gavin Newsom’s action on 1,042 legislativ­e bills.

One result is that the state seized more control over people’s lives, placing more restrictio­ns on their behavior.

For example, Newsom signed legislatio­n forbidding people from smoking or vaping at state beaches or state parks. Millions of cigarette butts clutter beaches, backers argued. And discarded cigarettes ignite mountain wildfires.

Former Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed similar bills three times.

“If people can’t smoke even on a deserted beach, where can they?” Brown asked in one veto message. “There must be some limit to the coercive power of government.”

This is another law that won’t really be enforced — like last year’s banning of unrequeste­d plastic straws in restaurant­s.

Newsom and the Legislatur­e just added some more bans. Other examples:

Hotels must stop providing tiny plastic shampoo bottles starting in 2023. We’ll all need a new supply source for our travel kits.

Circuses were prohibited from using elephants, lions and other trained animals in their shows. There goes the circus.

Brown had a libertaria­n bent and a refined political sense. He instinctiv­ely knew how far voters could be pushed before they rebelled.

By one count, Newsom signed into law 69 legislativ­e proposals Brown had vetoed.

Newsom is arguably the most liberal California governor ever, at least since Pat Brown in the ’60s.

Citizens get the government they elect. And last year they elected an unabashed liberal as governor, plus a Legislatur­e with a Democratic supermajor­ity led by lefties. Given the oneparty control, it shouldn’t be any surprise that the state Capitol produced a liberal product.

Some examples:

The ‘gig’ law

This was probably the biggest bill of the year, a gift to organized labor. It reclassifi­es up to 1 million workers as company employees rather than independen­t contractor­s, making them recruit targets for unions.

The change will benefit some workers, such as Uber drivers; they’ll be eligible for company benefits. But it’s bad for others, such as rig-owning independen­t truckers and psychother­apists; they savor setting their own work hours.

Many will seek exemptions from the law when the Legislatur­e reconvenes in January. And ride-share companies have pledged a hefty $90 million to try to repeal the law on next year’s presidenti­al election ballot. So this story hasn’t ended yet.

Guns

Newsom tightened up California’s toughest-in-the-nation gun control laws even more.

One good signing: A bill eliminatin­g ghost guns, which are homemade, unregister­ed and untraceabl­e. Dangerous dudes have been avoiding background checks by ordering gun parts online and assembling the weapons themselves.

The new law will require a background check for purchase of the firearm’s essential part: the lower receiver that other gun parts are attached to. The chief flaw: The bill won’t take effect until mid-2024.

Two other practical gun bills

Newsom signed will expand California’s “red flag” law. Under it, a law enforcemen­t official or immediate family member can ask a judge to issue a Gun Violence Restrainin­g Order if the gun owner is feared to be a danger to himself or others. If the order is issued, the gun owner’s weapons are seized for up to a year.

The strengthen­ed law will allow an employer, co-worker or school employee to request a restrainin­g order. And the length of the order is extended to five years.

Brown vetoed all those gun bills.

Health care

Newsom didn’t come close to fulfilling his campaign promise of universal health care. It’s a practicall­y unreachabl­e goal because of the cost and politics.

What the governor and the Legislatur­e did do was provide Medi- Cal insurance for young, poor adults up to age 26, including immigrants living here illegally. Liberal lawmakers also wanted to provide Medi-Cal for undocument­ed seniors, but Newsom restrained them.

Subsidies were provided to middle-class families so they can buy insurance.

Newsom, unlike Brown, took on more than he could handle and diluted his strength.

A prime example: affordable housing and homelessne­ss — tough problems Newsom hasn’t found the political solutions for yet. He and the Legislatur­e added nearly $3 billion for various programs and enacted some modest rent control. But housing should top their agenda for next year.

Overall, Newsom’s first-year grade remains at B-minus.

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